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The Andrews Sisters were an American close harmony singing group of the swing and boogie-woogie eras. The group consisted of three sisters: contralto LaVerne Sophia Andrews (1911–1967), soprano Maxene Anglyn Andrews (1916–1995), and mezzo-soprano Patricia Marie Andrews (1918–2013). [1]
The Andrews Sisters singing "Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree" in Private Buckaroo. "Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree (with Anyone Else but Me)" is a popular song that was made famous by Glenn Miller and by the Andrews Sisters during World War II. Its lyrics are the words of two young lovers who pledge their fidelity while one of them is away ...
Something about the Andrew Sisters and the big band music from the 1940s and the World War II era holds a special place for me, even if it all happened before I was born. Like with today's rock ...
The Andrews Sisters also seem to have given little thought to the meaning of the lyrics. [7] According to Patty Andrews, "We had a recording date, and the song was brought to us the night before the recording date. We hardly really knew it, and when we went in we had some extra time and we just threw it in, and that was the miracle of it.
The McGuire Sisters and the Andrews Sisters met several times during their careers. Phyllis credited Patty, Maxene, and LaVerne Andrews during a television interview with Maxene in the 1990s, hosted by Sally Jessy Raphael, saying that her sisters and she met the Andrews Sisters in New York in the early 1950s and received important advice. The ...
The Andrew Sisters. Patty Andrews; Maxene Andrews; LaVerne Andrews; Martha O'Driscoll as Connie; Noah Beery Jr. as Larry George Barbier as J.L. Wentworth; Maurice Cass as Papa; Marie Harmon as Susie
Ruth Oma Mackintosh Wilkinson [1] (née Wagaman, September 27, 1918 – February 12, 2013), better known as Roma Wilkinson, was an American songwriter whose compositions were performed by such singers as Bing Crosby and the Andrew Sisters.
At the same time two white dancers, Jerry Brandow and Lenny Kent, had approached the Andrews Sisters' manager Lou Levy with the song, claiming it was a traditional jazz tune, and five days after Bechet's recording, the Andrews Sisters recorded the song - with cleaner lyrics and a modified introduction, as "Hold Tight-Hold Tight (Want Some Sea ...
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